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Am 07.01.2015 um 17:08 schrieb Rich Freeman: |
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> On Wed, Jan 7, 2015 at 7:47 AM, Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon@×××××.com> wrote: |
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>> |
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>> It's worth repeating: the customer caused this, he must now feel the |
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>> pain and not you. |
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>> |
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> |
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> So, if he made an informed choice and that is what he chose, then that |
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> is how it has to be. |
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> |
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> However, if I were in the position of supporting this installation I'd |
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> probably give some thought as to what the right tools for the job are. |
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> Gentoo simply isn't designed to be updated twice a decade. If you |
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> REALLY want that kind of deployment you should probably be running |
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> something like RHEL, which will commercially support your old install |
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> for years and help you with any issues with migration (but there |
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> aren't likely to be many, since they will have tested moving from one |
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> 5-year-old release to the next 5-year-supported one. Debian stable or |
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> CentOS are of course free alternatives, or Ubuntu LTS. |
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> |
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> I love Gentoo, and I think it is the right tool for a lot of jobs, but |
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> it isn't always the right tool for EVERY job. |
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> |
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> If it really is just one box and you don't mind dealing with the |
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> downtime/hassle/etc twice a decade then by all means use Gentoo. |
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> However, if I were managing 100 of these this is not how I'd want to |
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> be doing it. |
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|
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100% Yes here. |
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See my other posting right now for what my current position is around |
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these issues. |
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Stefan |